Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W2141839922> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 63 of
63
with 100 items per page.
- W2141839922 endingPage "25" @default.
- W2141839922 startingPage "23" @default.
- W2141839922 abstract "We, the people who make websites, have been talking for 15 years about user experience [1], information architecture [2], content management systems [3], coding [4], metadata [5], visual design [6], user research [7] and all the other disciplines that facilitate our users' abilities to find and consume content. Weirdly, though, we haven't been talking about the meat of the matter. We haven't been talking about the content itself. Yeah, yeah. We know how to write for online readers. We know bullet lists pwn [8]. But who among us is asking the scary, important content questions, such as “What's the point?” or “Who cares?” Who's talking about the time-intensive, complicated, messy content development process? Who's overseeing the care and feeding of content once it's out there, clogging up the tubes and dragging down our search engines? As a community, we're rather quiet on the matter of content. In fact, we appear to have collectively, silently come to the conclusion that content is really somebody else's problem - “the client can do it,” “the users will generate it” - so we, the people who make websites, shouldn't have to worry about it in the first place. Do you think it's a coincidence, then, that web content is, for the most part, crap? Dealing with content is messy. It's complicated, it's painful, and it's expensive. And yet, the web is content. Content is the web. It deserves our time and attention. And that's where content strategy comes in. Content strategy plans for the creation, publication and governance of useful, usable content. Necessarily, the content strategist must work to define not only which content will be published, but why publish it in the first place. Otherwise, content strategy isn't strategy at all: It's just a glorified production line for content nobody really needs or wants. (See your company's CMS.) Content strategy is also - surprise - a key deliverable for which the content strategist is responsible. It's development is necessarily preceded by a detailed audit and analysis of existing content - a critically important process that's often glossed over or even skipped by project teams. key themes and messages recommended topics content purpose (that is, how content will bridge the space between audience needs and business requirements) content gap analysis metadata frameworks and related content attributes search engine optimization (SEO) implications of strategic recommendations on content creation, publication and governance. The main goal of content strategy is to use words and data to create unambiguous content that supports meaningful, interactive experiences. We have to be experts in all aspects of communication in order to do this effectively. That's a tall order. I'd like to propose that, in fact, there are far too many “aspects of communication” for a solitary content strategist to truly claim deep expertise in all of them. Editorial strategy defines the guidelines by which all online content is governed: values, voice, tone, legal and regulatory concerns, user-generated content and so on. This practice also defines an organization's online editorial calendar, including content life cycles. Web writing is the practice of writing useful, usable content specifically intended for online publication. This skill is a whole lot more than smart copywriting. An effective web writer must understand the basics of user experience design, be able to translate information architecture documentation, write effective metadata and manage an ever-changing content inventory. Metadata strategy identifies the type and structure of metadata, also known as data about data (or content). Smart, well-structured metadata helps publishers to identify, organize, use and reuse content in ways that are meaningful to key audiences. Search engine optimization (SEO) is the process of editing and organizing the content on a page or across a website (including metadata) to increase its potential relevance to specific search engine keywords. Content management strategy defines the technologies needed to capture, store, deliver and preserve an organization's content. Publishing infrastructures, content life cycles and workflows are key considerations of this strategy. Content channel distribution strategy defines how and where content will be made available to users. (Side note: please consider e-mail marketing in the context of this practice; it's a way to distribute content and drive people to find information on your website, not a standalone marketing tactic.) Now this breakdown certainly doesn't imply that a single content strategist can't or shouldn't be capable of playing these roles and creating the associated deliverables. In fact, in my experience, the content strategist is a rare breed who's often willing and able to embrace these roles as necessary to deliver useful, usable content. But, and this is a big but, if our community fails to recognize, divide and conquer the multiple roles associated with planning for, creating, publishing and governing content, we'll keep underestimating the time, budget and expertise it takes to do content right. We won't clearly define and defend the process to our companies and clients. We'll keep getting stuck with 11th-hour directives, fix-it-later copy drafts, and well keep on publishing crap. We can do better. Our clients and employers deserve it. Our audiences deserve it. We as users deserve it. David Campbell, the founder of Saks Fifth Avenue, said, “Discipline is remembering what you want.” When it comes to creating and governing content, it's easy to forget what we want, or even worse, to settle for less. But until we commit to treating content as a critical asset worthy of strategic planning and meaningful investment, we'll continue to churn out worthless content in reaction to unmeasured requests. We'll keep trying to fit words, audio, graphics and video into page templates that weren't truly designed with our business's real-world content requirements in mind. Our customers still won't find what they're looking for. And we'll keep failing to publish useful, usable content that people actually care about. Stop pretending content is somebody else's problem. Take up the torch for content strategy. Learn it. Practice it. Promote it. It's time to make content matter." @default.
- W2141839922 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W2141839922 creator A5060190678 @default.
- W2141839922 date "2011-01-10" @default.
- W2141839922 modified "2023-09-25" @default.
- W2141839922 title "Understanding the discipline of web content strategy" @default.
- W2141839922 doi "https://doi.org/10.1002/bult.2011.1720370208" @default.
- W2141839922 hasPublicationYear "2011" @default.
- W2141839922 type Work @default.
- W2141839922 sameAs 2141839922 @default.
- W2141839922 citedByCount "7" @default.
- W2141839922 countsByYear W21418399222013 @default.
- W2141839922 countsByYear W21418399222015 @default.
- W2141839922 countsByYear W21418399222016 @default.
- W2141839922 countsByYear W21418399222021 @default.
- W2141839922 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W2141839922 hasAuthorship W2141839922A5060190678 @default.
- W2141839922 hasBestOaLocation W21418399221 @default.
- W2141839922 hasConcept C101293273 @default.
- W2141839922 hasConcept C108827166 @default.
- W2141839922 hasConcept C110875604 @default.
- W2141839922 hasConcept C134306372 @default.
- W2141839922 hasConcept C136764020 @default.
- W2141839922 hasConcept C2776324614 @default.
- W2141839922 hasConcept C2778152352 @default.
- W2141839922 hasConcept C33923547 @default.
- W2141839922 hasConcept C41008148 @default.
- W2141839922 hasConcept C518677369 @default.
- W2141839922 hasConcept C79373723 @default.
- W2141839922 hasConcept C93518851 @default.
- W2141839922 hasConceptScore W2141839922C101293273 @default.
- W2141839922 hasConceptScore W2141839922C108827166 @default.
- W2141839922 hasConceptScore W2141839922C110875604 @default.
- W2141839922 hasConceptScore W2141839922C134306372 @default.
- W2141839922 hasConceptScore W2141839922C136764020 @default.
- W2141839922 hasConceptScore W2141839922C2776324614 @default.
- W2141839922 hasConceptScore W2141839922C2778152352 @default.
- W2141839922 hasConceptScore W2141839922C33923547 @default.
- W2141839922 hasConceptScore W2141839922C41008148 @default.
- W2141839922 hasConceptScore W2141839922C518677369 @default.
- W2141839922 hasConceptScore W2141839922C79373723 @default.
- W2141839922 hasConceptScore W2141839922C93518851 @default.
- W2141839922 hasIssue "2" @default.
- W2141839922 hasLocation W21418399221 @default.
- W2141839922 hasOpenAccess W2141839922 @default.
- W2141839922 hasPrimaryLocation W21418399221 @default.
- W2141839922 hasRelatedWork W1547794081 @default.
- W2141839922 hasRelatedWork W1555372563 @default.
- W2141839922 hasRelatedWork W1992000412 @default.
- W2141839922 hasRelatedWork W2046968332 @default.
- W2141839922 hasRelatedWork W234092521 @default.
- W2141839922 hasRelatedWork W2612763136 @default.
- W2141839922 hasRelatedWork W4214854518 @default.
- W2141839922 hasRelatedWork W656634605 @default.
- W2141839922 hasRelatedWork W2523648043 @default.
- W2141839922 hasRelatedWork W2801891532 @default.
- W2141839922 hasVolume "37" @default.
- W2141839922 isParatext "false" @default.
- W2141839922 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W2141839922 magId "2141839922" @default.
- W2141839922 workType "article" @default.